Guide to Archival Holdings
Record Group 104
Records of the U.S. Mint
Administrative History
The Bureau of the Mint, established in the Department of the Treasury
by an act of February 12, 1873, succeeded the Mint of the United States,
founded in 1792 at Philadelphia, and continued there after the Federal
Government moved to Washington, DC, in 1800. Originally an independent
agency, by 1857 the Mint had become responsible to the Department of the
Treasury. The Mint has been responsible for manufacturing coins; for receiving,
storing, and selling gold and silver bullion; for assaying and refining;
and for a variety of functions, such as inspections and gathering statistics.
The Mint has operated mints in several cities, as well as assay offices
and bullion depositories.
Records Description
Dates: 1851-1998
Volume: 253 cubic feet
Records of the Denver Mint and Assaying Office, 1863-1995. The
records document assays, coinage, gold and silver bullion deposits, construction
of the Mint and its two additions, and the location, receipt, and processing
of gold, silver, and other precious metals in the Rocky Mountain region.
Included are assay reports, correspondence, and registers.
Records of the following assay offices:
- Deadwood, South Dakota, 1897-1927;
- Helena, Montana, 1851-1933;
- Salt Lake City, Utah, 1909-33.
Finding Aid
Forrest R. Holdcamper, comp., Preliminary Inventory of the Records
of the Bureau of the
Mint, NC 152 (1958).
Record Group 114
Records of the Natural Resources Conservation Service
Administrative History
The Soil Conservation Service (SCS) was established in the Department
of Agriculture (USDA) in 1935, replacing the Soil Erosion Service which
had been established in 1933, and acquiring duties from other Government
agencies. In 1937, it began to provide technical and other assistance to
farmers in soil conservation districts organized under State laws. In 1938,
the SCS was given responsibility for farm forestry programs; in 1944, it
was given responsibility for assisting in water conservation programs;
and in 1952, it was authorized to assume the soil survey previously run
by other USDA units. The SCS conducts soil and snow surveys, river basin
surveys, and investigations and watershed activities; assists local groups
in planning an developing land and water resources; and gives technical
help to landowners and operators who participate in USDA's agricultural
conservation, cropland conversion, and cropland adjustment programs.
In 1935, regional offices were established to supervise conservation work in large geographic areas and in 1938-1939 area offices were created to assist the regional offices. State offices replaced area offices in 1942. Regional offices were discontinued in 1954, and the SCS now relies on State offices to give technical and administrative supervision to local units.
Records Description
Dates: 1933-71
Volume: 23 cubic feet
Records of the Southwest Regional Office, Albuquerque. The records
document range management and utilization, forestry projects, Civilian
Conservation Corps projects, meetings and conferences, surveying and mapping
programs, and camp inspections. Included are correspondence, reports, and
work plans.
Records of area offices in Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah. The records relate to agronomy, biology, cooperative programs, engineering, erosion control, meetings and conferences, range and woodland management, surveys, and work plans. The records are correspondence, memorandums, and reports.
Records of the North Dakota State Office, Bismarck. The records relate to the Tongue River Watershed and include geologic reports, contracts and specifications, test data, and work diaries.
Records of Civilian Conservation Corps camps in New Mexico and
Utah. The records relate to
policies, staffing, and work programs and include agreements, correspondence,
and orders.
Finding Aid
Shelf list.
Record Group 115
Records of the Bureau of Reclamation
Administrative History
The Reclamation Service was created under the Reclamation Act of June
17, 1902. The act authorized the Secretary of the Interior to locate, construct,
and maintain irrigation projects in 16 contiguous public land States and
territories. Texas and Hawaii were later included. The act created a reclamation
fund to finance the projects with monies generated from sales of public
lands. Costs would be repaid by the water users, mainly homesteaders on
public lands within the projects. The irrigation works would be owned by
the Government. By the end of 1907, over 24 million dollars had been spent
for work on 40 "primary projects" featuring construction of dams, canals,
and reservoirs.
In 1907, the Reclamation Service was made a separate agency within the Department of the Interior. In 1914, a Construction Division was created in the Washington office of the Reclamation Service. In the following year, the division relocated to Denver under the Chief of Construction and was given responsibility for management of all Reclamation Service work in the field. On April 1, 1920, the Chief of Construction in Denver was redesignated Chief Engineer.
The Reclamation Service became the Bureau of Reclamation (USBR) under charge of the newly established and appointed Commissioner on June 20, 1923. Criticism of the Federal reclamation program resulted in a series of USBR reorganizations. Two new laws were passed to amend reclamation land settlement policy and further liberalize repayment by settlers. The Boulder Canyon Project Act, passed on December 21, 1928, revolutionized the scale, design, purpose, and funding of USBR projects. Thereafter, USBR's water resources program embraced not only irrigation, but hydroelectric power development, flood control, and navigation. USBR construction financing would come largely from municipal water sales, hydroelectric power leases, and direct congressional appropriations, thus decreasing reliance on the reclamation fund.
Among the major USBR efforts that followed during the New Deal and post-World War II years were the Columbia Basin, Big Thompson, Central Valley, Boise, Missouri River Basin, Colorado River storage, and central Arizona projects.
On September 9, 1943, the USBR Commissioner established six regional offices, soon supplemented by a seventh, with jurisdictions drawn along river basin lines. Regional directors would report directly to the Commissioner's Office. The same reorganization established four branches at the Denver office. The Design and Construction Branch remained under the Chief Engineer, who was given assistant commissioner status in 1953.
Records Description
Dates: 1887-1995
Volume: 9535 cubic feet
Records of the Office of the Chief Engineer, Engineering and
Research Center, Denver, 1902-1990. The records document office administration;
engineering research; design, construction, and operation of reclamation
projects; and operation of water user districts. Included are applications,
construction and geological reports, correspondence, land acquisition case
files, project histories, and specifications. Nontextual records
include drawings, maps, photographs, and sketches.
Records of the following project and regional offices:
- Great Plains Region, Billings, Montana, 1942-77;
- Lower Colorado Region, Boulder City, Nevada, 1911-81;
- Mid-Pacific Region, Sacramento, California, 1947-79;
- Pacific Northwest Region, Boise, Idaho, 1904-93;
- Upper Colorado Region, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1938-68.
Finding Aids
- Draft preliminary inventory.
- Folder title lists.
- Lists of captions for photographs.
- Special lists for project histories and drawings.
- Classification manuals.
Related Microfilm Publications
M96, Project Histories and Reports of the Reclamation Bureau
Projects, 1905-1925 (includes only some projects).
Record Group 118
Records of United States Attorneys
Administrative History
The Judiciary Act of September 24, 1789, made provision for U.S. attorneys
and marshals who are appointed by the President and have functioned under
the general supervision of the Department of Justice since its creation
in 1870.
U.S. attorneys investigate violations of Federal criminal laws, present evidence to grand juries, prosecute Federal criminal cases, and serve as the Federal Government's attorney in civil litigation in which the United States is involved or has an interest.
Records Description
Dates: 1874-1982
Volume: 213 cubic feet
Records of the following U.S. attorneys:
- Albuquerque, New Mexico, 1954-76;
- Billings, Montana, 1973-82;
- Butte, Montana, 1975-80;
- Cheyenne, Wyoming, 1891-1911, with gaps;
- Del Norte, Colorado, 1874-1965;
- Denver, Colorado, 1891-1980;
- Fargo, North Dakota, 1976-80;
- Grand Junction, Montrose, and Pueblo, Colorado, 1891-1926;
- Great Falls, Montana, 1979;
- Helena, Montana, 1980;
- Phoenix, Arizona, 1950-67;
- Sioux Falls, South Dakota, 1894-1982, with gaps.
Finding Aid
Shelf lists (for most records) which provide the case number and title.
Restrictions
Access to some files or portions of documents may be restricted due
to law enforcement and/or privacy concerns.
Record Group 121
Records of the Public Buildings Service
Administrative History
Federal construction activities outside the District of Columbia were
performed by individual agencies and, to some extent, by special commissions
and officers appointed by the Secretary of the Treasury until 1853, when
a Construction Branch was created in the Department of the Treasury. The
Branch later became the Bureau of Construction in the Office of the Supervising
Architect, and that office, in turn, was transferred in 1933 to the Public
Buildings Branch of the Procurement Division. The Public Buildings Administration
was created in the Federal Works Agency in 1939 by consolidating the Public
Buildings Branch and the National Park Service's Branch of Buildings Management.
The latter branch had inherited responsibilities for Federal construction
in the District of Columbia from the Office of Public Buildings and Public
Parks of the National Capitol.
An act of June 30, 1949, abolished the Public Buildings Administration and transferred its functions to the newly established General Services Administration (GSA). The Public Buildings Service was established December 11, 1949, by the Administrator of General Services to assume the functions once assigned to the Public Buildings Administration.
The Public Buildings Service designs, constructs, manages, maintains, and protects most Federally-owned and -leased buildings. It is also responsible for the acquisition, utilization, and custody of GSA real and related personal property.
Records Description
Dates: 1889-1996
Volume: 105 cubic feet
Records of the Office of Real Property Disposal, Fort Worth. The records
concern the disposal of surplus Federal real property (such as airfields, ordnance plants,
military depots, buildings and installations, prisoner-of-war camps, school buildings, Atlas and
Titan Missile sites and Veterans Administration hospitals) in Colorado, Montana, New
Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming. They are case files, which include
correspondence, deeds, reports of surveys, studies, and title searches. Nontextual
records within the case files include drawings and maps.
Records of the Construction Management Division, Denver. The records document the design and construction of Federal buildings in the Rocky Mountain Region including a 1978 addition to the Denver Mint, and construction of Buildings 20 and 41 at the Denver Federal Center. In addition there are files relating to the historical development of the Denver Federal Center from 1941, when it was the Denver Ordnance Plant, to 1996. Included are correspondence, reports, specifications, and nontextual records such as drawings and photographs.
Finding Aids
Box contents lists for the real property disposal case files.
Record Group 136
Records of the Agricultural Marketing Service
Administrative History
The Agricultural Marketing Service was established in the Department
of Agriculture in 1939 to consolidate agricultural marketing and related
activities such as collecting and interpreting agricultural statistics,
performing market inspection and grading services, and establishing official
grade standards for many farm products. Its predecessors included the Bureau
of Agricultural Economics. The service was discontinued in 1942 and its
functions performed by other agencies. A new Agricultural Marketing Service
was established in 1953 and was renamed the Consumer and Marketing Service
between 1965 and 1972.
Records Description
Dates: 1922-39
Volume: 7 cubic feet
Records of the Packers and Stockyards Administration, Denver.
The records concern transportation of livestock and operation of stockyards
and packing plants. They are primarily correspondence.
Finding Aid
Entry 110 of Virgil E. Baugh, comp., Preliminary Inventory of the
Records of the Agricultural
Marketing Service, NC 118 (1965).
Record Group 143
Records of the Bureau of Supplies and Accounts (Navy)
Administrative History
The Bureau of Provisions and Clothing was established in the Department
of the Navy by an act of August 31, 1842, and renamed in 1892 the Bureau
of Supplies and Accounts. At first its functions, taken over from the former
Board of Navy Commissioners, were to supply the Navy with provisions, clothing,
and small stores, and to perform Department accounting. Later many of the
duties of the Bureau of Equipment were transferred to it. Through the end
of World War II, the Bureau was also Paymaster General of the Navy. Among
other functions, the Bureau supervised the procurement, receipt, storage,
shipment, and issuance of food, fuel, clothing, general stores, and other
materials; maintained and operated naval supply depots and similar units
and supervised activities of Supply Corps officers; procured, allocated,
and disbursed funds; and kept money and property accounts. The Bureau of
Supplies and Accounts was abolished May 1, 1966, as part of a Defense Department
reorganization, and its functions were assigned to the Naval Supply Systems
Command.
Records Description
Dates: 1942-45
Volume: 1 cubic foot
Record titled History of U.S. Navy Supply Depot, Clearfield,
Utah, 1942-45. The record is a narrative account
of the development, construction, commissioning, and operation of the depot.
Nontextual records include photographs. The record is a bound volume.
Record Group
147
Records of the Selective Service System, 1940-
Administrative History
An Executive order of September 23, 1940,
established the Selective Service System to provide an orderly, just, and
democratic method of obtaining men for military and naval service. Except
between December 5, 1942, and December 5, 1943, when it was placed under
the jurisdiction of the War Manpower Commission, the System was responsible
to the President. The System operated through a director and national headquarters,
regional boards, State headquarters, medical and registrant advisory boards,
boards of appeal, and local boards. There was a local board for each county
and for each unit of 30,000 people in urban areas. Through the local boards
the System registered, classified, and selected for induction male citizens
and aliens subject to service.
Records Description
Dates: 1940-60
Volume: 128 cubic feet
Records of the State headquarters
for Arizona, Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming. The records document the selection
of men for service in the armed forces including: registration cards for
individuals in those States born from April 28, 1877, to February 16, 1897
(the "fourth registration"); and DSS Form 301, "Application by Alien for
Relief from Military Service."
Records of the Utah Appeals Board and the South Dakota State headquarters. The records document administrative matters and are correspondence and minutes.
Finding Aids
Box contents lists.
Record Group
154
Records of the War Finance Corporation
Administrative History
The War Finance Corporation was created
by an act of April 5, 1918, to give financial support to industries essential
to the war effort and to banking institutions that aided such industries.
After the armistice, the Corporation assisted in the transition to peacetime
by financing railroads under Government control, and by making loans to
American exporters and agricultural cooperative marketing associations.
The Corporation established agricultural loan agencies in farming areas
to facilitate handling its agricultural loans, and cooperated with several
livestock loan companies. It was abolished on July 1, 1939.
Records Description
Dates: 1921-34
Volume: 30 cubic feet
Records of the following offices:
- Denver, Colorado;
- Helena, Montana;
- Minneapolis, Minnesota;
- Santa Fe, New Mexico.
The records document efforts to strengthen essential war industries, primarily through loans. Included are accounts, applications, circulars, collections and check issuances, correspondence, journals, ledgers, minutes, and receipts.
Finding Aid
Shelf list.
Record Group
155
Records of the Wage and Hour Division
Administrative History
The Public Contracts Division was created
to administer the Walsh-Healey Public Contracts Act of June 30, 1936, which
required Government supply contracts exceeding $10,000 to stipulate minimum
wage, overtime pay, safety, and health standards. The Wage and Hour Division
was established in the Department of Labor to administer the minimum wage,
overtime compensation, equal pay, and child labor standards provisions
of the Fair Labor Standards Act of June 25, 1938. The two divisions were
consolidated in 1942, and their area of responsibility was expanded by
subsequent legislation.
Records Description
Dates: 1939-45
Volume: 57 cubic feet
Records of New Mexico and Region
7, which covered Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, North Dakota, South
Dakota, and Wyoming. The records document the inspection of businesses
to ensure compliance with contract and wage and hour regulations. The records
are inspection case files including correspondence and reports.
Finding Aids
Herbert J. Horowitz, comp., Preliminary
Inventory of the Records of the Wage and Hour and
Public Contracts Divisions, NC
77 (1964).
Record Group 156
Records of the Office of the Chief of Ordnance
Administrative History
The Ordnance Department was established
as an independent bureau of the War Department by an act of May 14, 1812.
It was responsible for the procurement and distribution of ordnance and
equipment, the maintenance and repair of equipment, and the development
and testing of new types of ordnance. The Department was abolished in 1962,
and its functions were transferred to the U.S. Army Material Command.
Among the field establishments maintained by the Ordnance Department within the United States have been armories, arsenals, and ordnance depots, district offices, and plants.
Records Description
Dates: 1940-64
Volume: 31 cubic feet
Records of the following arsenals,
depots, and plants:
- Black Hills Ordnance Depot, Igloo, South Dakota;
- Denver Ordnance Zone and Plant;
- Deseret Depot, Tooele, Utah;
- 58th Quartermaster Depot, Ogden, Utah;
- Fort Wingate Army Depot, Gallup, New Mexico;
- Ogden Arsenal, Ogden, Utah;
- Pueblo Ordnance and Army Depot, Pueblo, Colorado;
- Tooele Depot, Tooele, Utah;
- Utah Depot, Ogden, Utah.
The records document the administration and operation of all facilities and the activation and deactivation of some. The records include circulars, correspondence, manuals, memorandums, orders, planning files, regulations, reports, and unit histories.
Finding Aid
Shelf list.
Record Group
163
Records of the Selective Service System (World War I)
Administrative History
The Selective Service System, under the
direction of the Office of the Provost Marshal General, was authorized
by an act of May 18, 1917, to register and induct men into military service.
Much of the management of the draft was left to the States, where local
draft boards were established on the basis of 1 for every 30,000 people.
These boards, appointed by the President on the recommendation of the State
Governor, registered, classified, inducted, and delivered to mobilization
camps men who were eligible for the draft. Legal and medical advisory boards
assisted the local boards and registrants, and district boards were established
to pass on occupational exemption claims and to hear appeals. The Provost
Marshal General's Office worked with local and district boards through
Selective Service State Headquarters.
Classification ceased shortly after the Armistice in 1918, and by May 31, 1919, all Selective Service organizations were closed except the Office of the Provost Marshal General, which was abolished July 15, 1919.
Records Description
Dates: 1917-19
Volume: 41 cubic feet
Records of the Office of the Provost
Marshal. The records document appeals to the President for exemptions from
military service. They are case files.
Records of district boards in Colorado, New Mexico, and North Dakota. The records document appeals for exemptions from military service. They are docket sheets.
Records of local boards in Colorado, Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming. The records document registration and classification of men for military service, including delinquents and deserters, and men ordered to report for induction and their appeals. The records are dockets and lists.
Finding Aid
Box contents lists and binder contents
lists.
Record Group
167
Records of the National Institute of Standards and Technology
Administrative History
The National Bureau of Standards (NBS)
was established by an act of Congress of March 3, 1901 (31 Stat. 1449).
The Bureau provides for a consistent system of physical measurements, conducts
tests on the properties of materials, develops technological standards
and testing methodology, performs research on radiation and in computer
technology, and promotes the dissemination of scientific and technological
information.
Radio work by the Bureau began in 1911 when the first measurement of a wavemeter was made by J. Howard Dellinger. In 1913, a Radio Section was organized within the Electricity Division. From 1914 to the U.S. entry into World War I, the Radio Section became involved in developing equipment for the Bureau of Navigation, the Bureau of Lighthouses, and the Coast and Geodetic Survey. By the end of World War I, the staff had grown from 7 to 40 people, with responsibilities for vacuum- tube measurements, radio frequency measurements, and radio equipment design and development, and some U.S. Army Signal Corps activities. After the war, major emphasis was placed on problems related to the rapid growth of radio broadcasting. When World War II ended, the Radio Section had grown to about 140 members, with more than 80 persons in the Interservice Radio Propagation Laboratory (IRPL). This laboratory, a cooperative effort of the Allied Armed Forces, predicted conditions of the ionosphere for worldwide radio communication.
On May 1, 1946, the Central Radio Propagation Laboratory (CRPL) was organized from the former Radio Section and absorbed the activities of the IRPL. In 1954, the CRPL moved to Boulder, Colorado, where during the next decade, it grew to seven divisions.
In 1964, the NBS was restructured, and on October 11, 1965, the CRPL was transferred to the Environmental Science Services Administration, the forerunner of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) within the Department of Commerce. Portions of the remaining divisions formed the Institute of Telecommunication Sciences of the Department of Commerce, and the Radio Standards Laboratory and Radio Standards Physics Division within the Institute for Basic Standards of the NBS.
Records Description
Dates: 1912-82
Volume: 122 cubic feet
Records primarily of the Radio
Section, the Interservice Radio Propagation Laboratory (IRPL), and the
Central Radio Propagation Laboratory (CRPL). There are also some papers
of John Howard Dellinger, who was a pioneer in the radio communications
field. The records document the development and refinement of radio transmission
technology. Included are central decimal, project, and program files; reports;
and technical publications. Nontextual records include photographs.
Records of the National Institute of Standards Library, Boulder, Colorado. The records document all types of measurements and consist of analyses, annual reports, circulars, monographs, studies, and technical notes.
Finding Aids
Draft inventory.
Record Group
171
Records of the Office of Civilian Defense
Administrative History
The Office of Civilian Defense (OCD) was
established in the Office for Emergency Management by an executive order
of May 20, 1941, to coordinate Federal, State and local defense relationships
regarding the protection of civilians during air raids and other emergencies,
and to facilitate civilian participation in war programs. It took over
the functions and records of the Division of State and Local Cooperation
of the Advisory Commission to the Council of National Defense. Fiscal,
budgetary, and personnel responsibilities for the OCD were handled by the
Division of Central Administrative Services of the Office for Emergency
Management until 1942 when these responsibilities, with minor exceptions,
were transferred to the OCD. The nine regional offices that coordinated
the work of State and local defense organizations were closed June 30,
1944, and an executive order of June 4, 1945, terminated the OCD.
Records Description
Dates: 1942-44
Volume: 2 cubic feet
Records of the Eastern Sector Office,
Salt Lake City, Utah. The records document civilian defense programs and
interagency cooperative efforts in Idaho, Montana, and Utah, including
civil defense drills, communications, medical facilities, protection of
plants and businesses, training and volunteer programs, and State and local
defense organizations. The records are correspondence and reports.
Record Group
187
Records of the National Resources Planning Board
Administrative History
The National Resources Planning Board
(NRPB) was established in the Executive Office of the President by Reorganization
Plan No. 1 of 1939. It inherited the functions of the National Planning
Board of the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works (created
July 20, 1933) and its various successors. The NRPB and its predecessors
planned public works, coordinated Federal planning relating to conservation
and efficient use of national resources, and encouraged local, State, and
regional planning. The NRPB was abolished by an act of June 26, 1943.
In 1934, the NPB began using the regional advisors and State advisory boards of the Public Works Administration for field contacts with State and local governments. On March 1, 1934, the NPB began developing a field organization of its own, establishing 12 Planning Districts throughout the country. The number of districts was subsequently reduced to 11. On May 13, 1937, the 11 planning district offices became nine regional offices. (Two additional regions were subsequently added for Alaska and the Caribbean territories.) The NRPB was liquidated in 1943. The regional offices primarily acted as clearinghouses of planning information, carried out the Board's activities in the field, and coordinated regional, State, and local natural resource planning activities.
Records Description
Dates: 1939-43
Volume: 19 cubic feet
Records primarily of Region 7 (which
covered Colorado, New Mexico, and Wyoming), Denver, and some records of
the office in Roswell, New Mexico. The records document committees and
projects; defense planning; drainage basins; the natural resources of the
Colorado, Pecos, and Upper Rio Grande Rivers; and urban planning. The records
include a card file, correspondence, and investigation reports.
Finding Aid
Virgil E. Baugh, comp., Preliminary
Inventory of the Regional Offices of the National
Planning Board, PI 64 (1954).
Record Group
188
Records of the Office of Price Administration
Administrative History
The Office of Price Administration (OPA)
originated in the Price Stabilization and Consumer Protection Divisions
of the Advisory Commission to the Council of National Defense on May 29,
1940, and in their successor, the Office of Price Administration and Civilian
Supply, created in April 1941 and redesignated the Office of Price Administration
by an Executive order of August 28, 1941. The OPA was given statutory recognition
as an independent agency by the Emergency Price Control Act of January
30, 1942. Under this legislation the OPA attempted to stabilize prices
and rents by establishing maximum prices for commodities (other than agricultural
products which were under the control of the Secretary of Agriculture)
and rents in defense areas. It also rationed scarce essential commodities
and authorized subsidies for the production of some goods. Most of the
price and rationing controls were lifted between August 1945 and November
1946.
Records Description
Dates: 1942-46
Volume: 314 cubic feet
Records of the following Region
7 units (the region covered Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New
Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming, with headquarters
at Denver):
- Accounting Department;
- district offices, executive offices, and local boards in Albuquerque, Boise, Cheyenne, Denver, Helena, Salt Lake City, and Santa Fe;
- Enforcement Division;
- Information Division;
- Price Department (including the Building Materials and Construction Price Division);
- Rationing Department.
Finding Aids
-
Meyer H. Fishbein and Elaine C. Bennett, comps.,
Preliminary Inventory of the Records of
the Accounting Department of the Office of Price Administration, PI 32 (1951). - Fishbein, Walter Weinstein, and Albert W. Winthrop, comps., Preliminary Inventory of the Price Department of the Office of Price Administration, PI 95 (1956).
- Fishbein, et al., comps., Preliminary Inventory of the Rationing Department of the Office of Price Administration, PI 102 (1958).
-
Betty R. Bucher, comp., Preliminary Inventory
of the Information Department of
the Office of Price Administration, PI 119 (1959). - Fishbein and Bucher, comps., Preliminary Inventory of the Office of Price Administration, PI 120 (1959).
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